Without public notice or input Yellowstone National Park has consigned fifty-three of America's last wild bison captured during 2011 to the USDA Animal & Plant Health Inspection Service for population control experiments.

Yellowstone National Park has betrayed wild buffalo and the American people. Without giving public notice or seeking any input, Yellowstone National Park consigned fifty-three of America's last wild bison, captured during 2011, to the USDA Animal & Plant

BILLINGS, Mont. -- A coalition of environmental and American Indian groups sued two federal agencies today to stop the mass slaughter of bison that migrate outside Yellowstone National Park in search of food

A coalition of conservation groups, Native Americans, and Montanans are suing the National Park Service for their role in slaughtering 3,300 wild American bison that inhabit Yellowstone National Park. Approximately 3,000 bison remain in Yellowstone

In 2007 federal protections were dropped for the protection of Yellowstone grizzlies. Ever since then, the Greater Yellowstone Coalition have been fighting to give protection back to the bears. They argued that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS)

Fifteen wolf packs have denned and produced pups in Wyoming outside Yellowstone National Park this year, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has reported.
The federal agency, which announced it is continuing to monitor reproduction, did not say in its

Yellowstone National Park's bison herd is the most important and only large wild free-roaming herd in the nation, and one of only two herds that are genetically pure descendants of the great herds of bison that used to blanket the western landscape.

The summer after they retired in 1995, Ocala residents Bob and Irene Thompson hit the road to see America's scenic West and check out the fishing in cool mountain streams. The first time they went to Yellowstone National Park it was to vacation, but

The number of Yellowstone National Park bison killed through disease management and hunting is projected to hit an all-time high this winter. On Tuesday morning, 59 more bison were shipped to slaughter from the Stephen Creek facility.

As the number of elk that live on the northern fringes of Yellowstone National Park continues to decline, the area just north of the park will become increasingly important for their survival, biologists said Tuesday.